Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1951 Page: 3 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Sapulpa Herald and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1951
SAPULPA HERALD, SAPULPA, OKLAHOMA
SECTION ONE- PAGE THREE
s
Fine
right
s
Chieftains Go Inside For
Practice Today For Rogers
Truman Would
Put Tax Collectors
tinder Civil Service
Cold, snowy weather put a rrlmpV
In plana (or a (Inal workout to-
day ol the Sapulpa gridster*. Coach
B. Bomgardnrr said.
But tie wasn't exactly put out
about It.
“We've already (iniahed our con-
tart work lor the week, but we
did want to work some on pass
defease and offense," he said. “But
if you're not ready on Thursday,
you can't be ready Friday." he
udded
Rogers has a team comparable
to Sapulpa's. Bomgardner said.
They have a backfield that will
average just a lew pounds more,
and their line Is about the same
as ours.
They have an excellent passing
October Included
Mott Deadly Week
In Stote's History
OKLAHOMA CITY. Nov 1 (If- -
Fifty-seven persons were killed in
Oklahoma traffic accidents durum
October. 25 of them Oct 14 through
20 for the worst seven-day period
on highway patrol records. Safety
Commissioner Dixie Ollmer said
Thursday.
The Oetober toll was second only
to the 00 deaths In June in monthly
deaths this year Fifty-one were
killed in October, 195(1
Ollmer said the biggest single
attack, and a strong running game, cause of deaths last month was
The two teams should be rated cars running oil the road
about even for the contest, both
of them being generally ranked in
the first 10 teams In
this year
Fifteen were killed In collisions
of two or more vehicles, eight
the state [pedestrians were struck and killed.
six died In train-car accidents.
Despite the possibility of
weather tomorrow night
cold two children were killed when they
________ __________ _______ a fell from moving cars, two each
crowd Is expected to be or. hand dlpd when automobiles hit fixed
to welcome the all-victorious Chief- objects and animals, one died when
tains back from an extensive string H c“l overturned in the roadway,
of our-of-town games. The Sa- “nd one was killed in an uuto-
pulpan.s have won seven games so 'dotorcycle crash
far till* year, three ol them In The highway w!0 (he highest toll
(he Oklahoma Six conference. was U 8 277 w ith six deaths Next
Tickets for (lie game will be on w*s 8 99 with five Ten persons
sale at Reel Drug. C. W. Dickerson. kllled cllV limita-
high school principal announced. l,hrrr' P1,CJ? .ln Luwl?" ,,nd Mhi I,Ov
Dickerson also said parking facilities ’J**? ln Tu*HJ* “,lldr.on!| pl,ch tn
at Euchee mission were pretty poor °klahom* Cu> “nd Cordell
right now because of the rain. "It'*' Comanche led the counties in
too soft for parking, because of the October with six deaths, five of
rain and snow that has been falling l**em Mlld,er* from Fort Hill Five
on It." he said. "Any cars parked k.|!!ed 1,1 both °k,i"
there might be there all night.” hr
added
Crowder Spurned
Notional Record
In Colorado Go mo
homu and Lincoln counties
Nighttime driving took 32 lives,
daytime 25 Ten persons died in
car crashes on Oct. 19. the worst
day of the month and the highest
stngle-dav toll since 10 died Dec
IB. 1949
NORMAN Okla Nov l.-Eddie
Crowder. Oklahoma's skillful young
quarterback from Muskogee had a
national record In his grasp last
week during Oklahoma's 55-14 de-
feat of Colorado at Norman.
Eddie pitcher four touchdown
forward passes in the first 17 min- ■
utes and 16 seconds of last Satur-
day's game against the Oolden Buf-1
falos. With only 2:26 of the second
quarter gone. Crowder had complet-
ed five of five for 167 yard* and
four Oklahoma touchdowns.
The top mark in the records for
one game i* five touchdown passes,
made twice last year bv Vilo Parilli
Kentucky's fine quarterback while
Kentucky was overwhelming Cin-
cinnati 41-7 and North Dakota R3-0
After pegging four touchdown
passes In 17 16 against Colorado.
Crowder had 42 minutes and 44
seconds—nearly three full ouarter*
—left In which to fracture Parities
record
On the Oklahoma sideline. Coach
Bud Wilkinson was notified by press
box telephone of Crowder's close
proximity to Partin'* national rec-
ord. But the Sooner coach elected
to pwm up the opportunity
He soon .withdrew Crowder to
give valuable quarterbacking ex-
perience to two sophomore signal-
callers. Jack* Van Pool and Jack
Olng Crowder went back In for
part of the last half, but concen-
trated on Oklahoma's rushing of-
fensive. He threw only two addi-
tional passes In the game, hlttln"
End Jack Lockett for eight yards
with one Lockett dropped the
other one. narrowlv missing making
a shoestring catch
Eddie missed Partin's national
mark because he and his coach de-
cided to Ignore It. but his four
touchdown pitches with the game
onlv 17 minutes and 16 seconds old,
and in a total elapsed time of only
13 minutes 50 seconds from the first
touchdown pass at 3:36 of the first
quarter to the fourth touchdown
pass at 2:16 of the arrond quarter.
Is believed a feat no other collegiate
passer has ever approached In 45
year* of American football since the
forward pass was first legalised In
IBM
t
Interior Dept.
Donios Boyd Opposed
Synthetic Fuels
WASHINGTON. Nov 1 HP- The
Interior Department denied Thurs-
day that James Boyd, former di-
rector of the Bureau of Mines, op-
posed the synthetic liquid fuels pro-
gram favored by Secretary of In-
terior Osear L. Chapman
When Boyd left the department
Oct. 16. he was quoted as saying
he quit partly because he disagreed
with Chapman's policy of encourag-
ing industry to start a synthetic
liquid fuels program fie stn<> has
joined the Kenneeott Copper Co
But a department spokesman
said Thursday that “Bovd endorsed
the synthetics program at every
stage of its development." He made
public photostats of memoranda
from Boyd to Chapman urging the
department to encourage manu-
facture of petroleum products from
coal and oil shale
The spokesman said the memos
were released In response to
queries nbout "critical statements" !
which Boyd has made about the
synthetics program slner he left
the department
--£-
sauce leader course at the armored
1 school here.
Tills specialized course Includes
all subjects pertinent to the oper-
ation of ground reronnalaxanre and
aecurlty units.
I Heavy bombardment is routine for
, Paul E Christian, seaman. U8N. son
of Mr and Mrs Einnutt Christian
of Sapulpa. serving aboard the heavy
cruiser 088 Helena In Korean
waters
The ship has bombarded North
Korean and Chinese forces at Yong-
dok. Tanclion. Slnchon. Koko-do.
Sanchok and Chong jin During the
last six months she has served as a
heavy support ship for a fast carrier
task force
The Helena Is on her aecond tour
I of duty In the Korean area, having
returned to the United States for
overhaul before reporting back to
the troubled arm.
WASHINGTON. Nov 1 HP—Presi-
dent Truman will recommend to
Congress ln January that all col-
lectors of Internal revenue be
brought under civil service and
subjected to the standards of that
servlcp. the White House announced
Thursday.
The move to end the political
patronage method by which intern-
al revenue collectors traditionally
have been appointed was proposed
to the President by Frank E Mc-
Kinney. new chairman of the Demo-
cratic national rommttee. at u
meeting with Mr Truman Thurs-
day morning
The MeKlanev proposal appeared
to be an administration attempt
to clean house In the government's
tax collecting department At least
29 officials and employes ol the
scandal-rooked Bureau of Internal
Revenue have resigned or hnvr
ben fired ol suspended during tin-
last 12 months
Not all of them necessarily are
connected with the tax scandals
which have popped up across the
country
Two $10,000 year collectors have
been indicted on charges of bri-
bery. Others have been replaced
or suspended for “Incompetence,"
and another was forred to realgn
"for the good of the service"
"It Is the Intention ol the Presi-
dent to recommend lo Congress
in January that Mr Mi Kmin v
suggestion be enacted into law."
Wane House Press Secretary Jo-
seph Short told newsmen
Cool Mine Blast
Takes 12 Lives
KAYFORD W VA . Nov 1 HI
Authorities Thursday Investigated
West Virginia’s worst coal mine
disaster in six years that took the
lives of 12 miners
The victims, members of a main-
tenance crew, were trapped by a
pre-dawn explosion Wednesday
thre-qua iters of a mile inside the
Trunx-Traer Coal Company's Unit-
ed Mine No 1.
Four members of the crew, one
of whom was blown to safety by
Emonem Club To
Send Packages To
Korea This Year
Four Of Seven
Escaped Prisoners
Still At Large
LAWTON. Nov 1 HP Four n!
seven escaped county prisoners
still were on the loose here Thurs-
day after a third prisoner walked
. . _ l'-'ck 111 Kill Wed in it.I meld
Kmanem club members have de- Harold Basil Beakon 28-ycar-old
elded to forego their Christmas gift ex-convtct, gave himself up to
exchange this year, and send two Comanche County Sheriff Otis Wal-
$10 CARE packages to Korea. Mrs. i dron Beakon. who was charged
Howard Eden. Emanem club presl- with car theft, accompanied his
dent announced today lather and grandfather bark to the
This is the local organization's 11,11
plan for participating In the general Two other escapees, J W Hart-
federation's CARE for Korea cam- | well. 28. of Fletcher, and Roy Ho-
patgo • bet't Willis. 23. Iaiwton, aurrendrr-
Paekages prepared by the Em- & „£ HhHb> 8‘‘"K
anem dub will ^ The even prisoners broke out ol
supplementary food for an orphan r()manrhp ,.oun|y jHll Tuesday
for one month Mrs Eden explained bv ,l|l(„ hol(. lhroUKh ,, Hteel
Instead of holding our club gift px- door and sliding down an
change. In which each membei ar-< improvised blanket-ro|>e from a
leets a dollar gift for another mem- third story window
her our membership will donate Sllll at Urgp WPrr Lpol, Biltcrr
their dollars to the CARE cam- i Tommy Hill. 17. Cecil Pillow 25.
iwign.' she said. and Robert Leslie Carpenter, 21
The Oeneral Federation of Worn- - -
en's clubs' CARE for Korea cam- '
paign will run through the Thanks-
giving season, beginning on Nov 12
and finishing on Thanksgiving Day
The packages bought with the
money collected will be delivered to DUNt AN. Nov 1 HP Fire broke
Korean refugees between Nov 24 out til the choir section of the ftre-
and Christmas , E®?1 . F,r!,‘ Naza. one church here
_ . 1 Thursday and was .sucked through
"There ran be no more fitting - t|)p PnurP auditorium b> the hrut-
Thanksglvins Day offering for - llla H|ld rooun(t t|UctM causing $35.-
Amrricans," Mrs. John L. White- i (M)II dlinuiKP
hurst, rhairman. Oeneral Federa- j p F r . . .
Hon of Women's Clubs, wrote in her thr dam|^p VsHmnte. said ‘the
message to club women over the bulld|nK was f,rpproof pu, ^ws
nation ln announcing the <am*. anP wajj, Wf.rr damaged, hymnals
palgli "CARE packages can mean, scorched, window glass cracked
the difference between life ana i Hlld carpets water-soaked Origin
death for Korean war orphans and j a( me blaze was not known
refugees " Cook estimated It would take at
"We led that the project Is a |pns< tlirpp months to repair the
very worthy one," Mrs Eden said, auditorium which seats 400 persons.
"and we are happy to be doing our [ __________
bit towards the general federation's
goal of 150.000 CARE packages for
Korea ”
Mike Says Truman l
Won't Run Again
Ml SKI KIKE Nov 1 HP—Presi-
dent Truman will not run for re-
election. Sen Mike Monltoney
speculated" on ht.s return from
Washington
The Oklahoma senator, who will
spend the next two weeks travel-
ing in the state, said he has no
Inside information, but that he
based his belief on "what Mrs.
Truman thinks and the attitude of
most of the President's friends
He said hi.s statement Is "absolute
speculation "
Monroney favors sending an un-
instrurted state delegation to the
Democratic presidential convention
at Chicago, he said, so It can have
a free hand" It Mr. Truman does
New World Open
To Disabled Man
RIPLEY. Nov 1 HP—When a
tractor accident paralyzed the legs
of a Payne county farmer and con-
fmrd him in .i wheel chair, it
opened a new world that lets him
travel around the world
Milderd Townsdln, 4H Is Ripley's
telephone operator, one of the lew
male operators In Oklahoma
'Here I am. probably the onlv
man In the Ripley area who ruli't
walk a lick." says Townsdln. "and
yet with a few steps I can travel
eountless miles.''
nerves in his legs.
"I lay there thinking how a help-
less man could support his family
and keep his children ln school,**
Townsdln says The answer was the
'l l' pillIII<- npei .I'm lull a' Ripley.
Don't feel sorry for me be-
cause I'm cooped up here In a
wheelchair." he smiles. "I get
around even if it Is only by tele-
phone Why I can sit right here
and go anywhere."
LICENSE COLLECTOR
OREENVILLE. S C. <U.R)— A deaf
and dumb man was hailed Into
court here for drunken driving. Of-
ficers said he had 12 licenses from
different parts of the country
Townsdln, father of four children. 1 ' “
was a prosperous farmer in 1943 Economists estimate there are
when a tractor accident stilled the 170 automobiles for every sendee
station ln the United States.
Fire Damages
Duncon Church
Santa’s Coming Early
at B. F. Goodrich!
jst
See Our Advertisement in Sunday’s Herald
B.F.Goodric
It's our $pecio| Christmas present to you! An op-
portunity to buy what you've always wanted at the
lowest price ever offered in Sapulpa!
9 N. Main
the blast, escaped injury
Authorities speculated the blast
was touched off when sparks from
machinery ignited coal dust.
JOE’S FISH HOUSE
17*/i South Main
PAN TROUT
lb. 59c
HALIBUT
lb. 75c
CATFISH
STEAKS
lb. 79c
Phone 2957
-• SPECIAL •
Freeh CATFISH ........ lb. 65c
Fried Boneless Perch .... lb. 75c
FRIED SHRIMP ....... $1.00 daa.
Oysters Deviled Crabs
Salads
HAMBURGERS
Rghtiag Mea
i Continued from Page 1>
*
Eaelham was employed by the Gull
Oil Co. at Tulsa He Is a 1947
graduate of thr Olenpool high
school
FORT KNOX. Ry — Pvt Gilbert
E. Miller, husband of Mrv Carolvn
Miller, 1014 E Dewey, is mu- of the
rrrent graduates of the Reronnais-
Hfc. David Newton. Sapulpa. Is
among a group of 24 Oklahoma
Armv Korea veteran* who returned
to the United States aboard a mili-
tary sea transport which doekrd at
Seattle on Oct 24
f pl. Hubert E River*. t'MMCR.
son of Mr and Mr* Jerry F
Rivers. 319 S Main, who has been
stationed with thr Marine corps In
San Diego for thr past year I*
home on leave Hr will Irave Sun-
day to return U> San Diego.
They’re Here!
Onco-I n-A-Lif otima
CHANCE TO SAVE
Special Tradae Daye Offer!
Wa planned title petlel offer far the leaf Trodae
Dove creel, but duo to Iota ehlpioot tha efocfc failod to
r-i~ MAW WF M*V| MCIIVIQ THIS AMAZING
$HIPM1NT OF GOODS The biggest borpoin over of-
SwObTIM ii Sunday’s Herald
Last 2 Days
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
to taka advantage of Harrison's
and M. Born Tailoring Co.
Harvest Sale Special
With the Purchase of a
Made-to-Measure
M. BORN
SUIT
you may select o match-
ing or centreating pair af
slacks for just
V-
-
ftt
Style ond quality conscious men recognise M Born
custom tailored suits as one of the finest on the market
There is a lorge selection of beautiful patterns to choose
from,
prices starting of $44.50
Uattf Saturday night, you may select a second pair of
ere wMi your suit end pay hut $5.00 for them!
so o matching fabric or contrasting fabric. AR
of ceoroo.
RAY and KINNKTH
HARRISON
SHOO FOR $10 I. Dowov MN1 NATS
ItMfUM CLOTHING
Morton’s Slashes Prices on
Entire Stock of
FALL SUITS
Yob, that's right-Morton's antira stock of woman's toll
ond wintar suits go on solo ot drastic reductions! Hurry!
Sava! Finest fashions ot money-saving prices!
REDUCED
I0to40
ALL CHILDREN'S
CARRCRAFT
COATS
RIDUC ID
Lovely styles io worm
! Save!
Nona Reserved
Nona
Hold Bock!
ALL GO!
Famous
"Batty Joan"
ond
"Fashionbilt"
labels!
Sava Dollars
on Newest
Suit Fashions!
Beautiful we
loo4$fi^ suit
Solids, checks, combina-
tions! Toot suit is koto
—now ot o real saving!
So burry io ond save!
M k)
mmww%
Yeur Ntorv af NallanaWy Kami
122-114 EAST DEWEY
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Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 37, No. 52, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 1, 1951, newspaper, November 1, 1951; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1492212/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed July 7, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.